Article (Scientific journals)
Fingerprinting of vegetable oil minor components by multidimensional comprehensive gas chromatography with dual detection
Purcaro, Giorgia; Barp, L.; Beccaria, M. et al.
2015In Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry, 407 (1), p. 309-319
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Keywords :
Columns comparison; Fingerprint; Multidimensional comprehensive gas chromatography(GC× GC); Sterol; Vegetableoilminor compounds; Wax; Alcohols; Chemical compounds; Chemical detection; Chromatographic analysis; Chromatography; Extrapolation; Fatty acids; Mass spectrometers; Oil shale; Olive oil; Palmprint recognition; Spectrometers; Waxes; Ionization of gases; Vegetable oils; Chemical fingerprint; European legislation; Extra virgin olive oil; Mass spectrometer detectors; Theoretical plate numbers; Minor compounds; Sample preparation methods; Gas chromatography; Corylus; Chromatography, Gas; Food Contamination; Plant Oils
Abstract :
[en] The potentiality of a multidimensional comprehensive gas chromatographic (GC×GC) method, employing a simultaneous dual detection (FID and mass spectrometer), to generate peculiar two-dimensional chromatograms to be used as a chemical fingerprint, was investigated to characterize minor compounds in edible oil, particularly olive oil. The best column combination for this application was investigated comparing two column sets (orthogonal or reverse-type), equivalent in terms of theoretical plate number, but differing in stationary phase combination. The apolar×mid-polar set gave a superior separation power, thus was used for further characterization. Different levels of information were extrapolated from the two-dimensional chromatogram. Using the FID, reliable quantification of the alkyl esters fatty acids and waxes was obtained, comparable to the results obtained using the official method, as required by the European legislation. However, thanks to a slight modification of the sample preparationmethod, the increased separation power obtained using the GC×GC method, and the support of the mass spectrometer detector, further diagnostic information was extrapolated considering the free sterol and tocopherol fractions. In particular, the profiles of extra virgin olive oil samples were compared with a hazelnut oil sample, highlighting that the latter was characterized by a larger number of compounds, completely absent in the extra virgin olive oil samples, which can be used to detect illegal admixtures. © Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2014.
Disciplines :
Chemistry
Food science
Author, co-author :
Purcaro, Giorgia  ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Agronomie, Bio-ingénierie et Chimie (AgroBioChem) > Chimie des agro-biosystèmes
Barp, L.;  Dipartimento di Scienze degli Alimenti, Università di Udine, via Sondrio 2A, Udine, 33100, Italy
Beccaria, M.;  Dipartimento di Scienze del Farmaco e dei Prodotti per la Salute (SCIFAR), University of Messina, Viale Annunziata, Messina, 98168, Italy
Conte, L. S.;  Dipartimento di Scienze degli Alimenti, Università di Udine, via Sondrio 2A, Udine, 33100, Italy
Language :
English
Title :
Fingerprinting of vegetable oil minor components by multidimensional comprehensive gas chromatography with dual detection
Publication date :
2015
Journal title :
Analytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry
ISSN :
1618-2642
eISSN :
1618-2650
Publisher :
Springer Verlag
Volume :
407
Issue :
1
Pages :
309-319
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
Available on ORBi :
since 17 January 2019

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